TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present invention relates to a half-bridge power semiconductor module capable
of significantly reducing parasitic inductances generated in paths for principal currents
without increasing thermal resistance, and a method of manufacturing the same.
BACKGROUND ART
[0002] Power modules have been known which are obtained by housing, within a single package,
a half-bridge circuit including two power semiconductor device chips connected in
series and an output terminal set at a middle point on their connection (see Patent
Literatures 1 and 2). In Patent Literatures 1 and 2, the direction of a principal
current which flows through a conductor on the front surface of an insulating plate
and the direction of a principal current which flows through a conductor on the back
surface of the insulating plate are set opposite to each other. In this way, "close
and parallel counterflows" are generated, thus reducing the parasitic inductance in
the power module.
CITATION LIST
PATENT LITERATURES
[0003]
Patent Literature 1: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2002-112559
Patent Literature 2: Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2002-373971
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
[0004] Here, the power modules of Patent Literatures 1 and 2 dissipate heat generated inside
the modules from the back-surface side of the insulating plate, and therefore another
insulating board is provided on the back-surface side of the back-surface conductor.
This has led to a problem that the thermal resistance of the power module is increased.
[0005] The present invention has been made in view of the above problem, and an object thereof
is to provide a half-bridge power semiconductor module capable of reducing parasitic
inductances generated in paths for principal currents without increasing the thermal
resistance, and a method of manufacturing the same.
[0006] A half-bridge power semiconductor module according to one aspect of the present invention
includes an insulating wiring board including a positive-electrode wiring conductor,
a bridge wiring conductor, and a negative-electrode wiring conductor arranged on or
above a single insulating plate in such a way as to be electrically insulated from
each other. The back-surface electrodes of a high-side power semiconductor device
and a low-side power semiconductor device are joined to the front sides of the positive-electrode
wiring conductor and the bridge wiring conductor. Front-surface electrodes of the
high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device are
connected to the bridge wiring conductor and the negative-electrode wiring conductor
by high-side connection means and low-side connection means.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0007]
[Fig. 1] Part (a) of Fig. 1 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 1 according to a first embodiment, part (b) of Fig. 1 is
a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig.
1, and part (c) of Fig. 1 is a circuit diagram of the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 1.
[Fig. 2] Part (a) to part (d) of Fig. 2 are plan views illustrating the first step
in a method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in Fig.
1, and part (e) of Fig. 2 is a plan view illustrating the second step in the method
of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in Fig. 1.
[Fig. 3] Part (a) of Fig. 3 illustrates a principal current ILH which flows while
a high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 1 is turned on, part
(b) of Fig. 3 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows through
a diode in a low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT in Fig. 1, and part
(c) of Fig. 3 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILH which flows through
a diode in the high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 1.
[Fig. 4] Part (a) of Fig. 4 is a plan view illustrating modification 1 in which snubber
capacitors (25HB, 25LB) are added to the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1
in Fig. 1, and part (b) of Fig. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 4.
[Fig. 5] Part (a) of Fig. 5 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 2 according to a second embodiment, part (b) of Fig. 5
is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig.
5, and part (c) of Fig. 5 is a circuit diagram of the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 2.
[Fig. 6] Part (a) of Fig. 6 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 3 according to a third embodiment, part (b) of Fig. 6 is
a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig.
6, and part (c) of Fig. 6 is a circuit diagram of the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 3.
[Fig. 7] Part (a) of Fig. 7 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 3-1 according to modification 2 of the third embodiment,
and part (b) of Fig. 7 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane
B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 7.
[Fig. 8] Part (a) of Fig. 8 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 3-2 according to modification 3 of the third embodiment,
and part (b) of Fig. 8 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane
A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 8.
[Fig. 9] Part (a) of Fig. 9 illustrates a principal current ILH which flows while
a high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 8 is turned on, part
(b) of Fig. 9 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows through
a low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD in Fig. 8, and part (c) of Fig.
9 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILH which flows through a high-side
power semiconductor device (diode) 13HD in Fig. 8.
[Fig. 10] Part (a) of Fig. 10 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 3-3 according to modification 4 of the third embodiment,
and part (b) of Fig. 10 is a circuit diagram of the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 3-3.
[Fig. 11A] Part (a) of Fig. 11A is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 4 according to a fourth embodiment, part (b) of Fig. 11A
is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig.
11A, and part (c) of Fig. 11A is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 11A.
[Fig. 11B] Part (a) of Fig. 11B is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane C-C' in part (a) of Fig. 11A, and part (b) of Fig. 11B is a circuit diagram
of the half-bridge power semiconductor module 4.
[Fig. 12] Part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 12 are plan views illustrating a method of
manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 4 in Fig. 11.
[Fig. 13] Part (a) of Fig. 13 illustrates a principal current ILH which flows while
a high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 11A is turned on, part
(b) of Fig. 13 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows through
a diode in a low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT in Fig. 11A, and part
(c) of Fig. 13 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILH which flows through
a diode in the high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 1A1.
[Fig. 14A] Part (a) of Fig. 14A is a plan view illustrating the configuration of a
half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 according to a fifth embodiment, part (b)
of Fig. 14A is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part
(a) of Fig. 14A, part (c) of Fig. 14A is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 14A, and part (d) of Fig. 14A is an imaginary plan
view obtained by removing standing terminals (14B', 14H', 14L', 14HG', 14HS', 14LG',
14LS') from part (a) of Fig. 14A.
[Fig. 14B] Fig. 14B is a circuit diagram of the half-bridge power semiconductor module
5.
[Fig. 15] Part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 15 are plan views illustrating an example of
the method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 in Fig. 14A
and Fig. 14B.
[Fig. 16] Part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 16 are plan views illustrating another example
of the method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 in Fig.
14A and Fig. 14B.
[Fig. 17A] Part (a) and part (b) of Fig. 17A illustrate a principal current ILH which
flows while a high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 14A is turned
on, and part (c) and part (d) of Fig. 17A illustrate a principal current (loop current)
ILL which flows through a diode in a low-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13LT in Fig. 14A.
[Fig. 17B] Part (e) and part (f) of Fig. 17B illustrate a principal current (loop
current) ILH which flows through a diode in the high-side power semiconductor device
(switch) 13HT in Fig. 14A.
[Fig. 18] Part (a) of Fig. 18 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power semiconductor module 6 according to a sixth embodiment, part (b) of Fig. 18
is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig.
18, part (c) of Fig. 18 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane
B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 18.
[Fig. 19] Fig. 19 is a plan view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge power
semiconductor module 7 according to a seventh embodiment.
[Fig. 20A] Part (a) of Fig. 20A illustrates a principal current ILH which flows while
a high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 19 is turned on, and
part (b) of Fig. 20A illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows
through a low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD in Fig. 19.
[Fig. 20B] Part (a) of Fig. 20B illustrates a principal current ILL which flows while
a low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT in Fig. 19 is turned on, and part
(b) of Fig. 20B illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows through
a high-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13HD in Fig. 19.
[Fig. 21] Fig. 21 is a cross-sectional view illustrating the structure of a half-bridge
power module 1000 according to a comparative example.
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0008] Hereinbelow, embodiments and their modifications will be described with reference
to the drawings. It is to be noted that the configurations of half-bridge power semiconductor
modules will be schematically described below and, in these schematic drawings, the
relation between the thickness and the dimensions in plan views, the proportions of
the thicknesses of layers, and the like are depicted with exaggeration to facilitate
understanding. The same member will be denoted by the same reference sign, and description
thereof will not be repeated.
[First Embodiment]
[0009] The structure of a half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 according to a first
embodiment will be described with reference to part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 1. Part
(a) of Fig. 1 is a plan view, and part (b) of Fig. 1 is a cross-sectional view taken
along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 1. Part (c) of Fig. 1 is a circuit
diagram of the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1. In part (b) of Fig. 1, the
flow of a principal current (load current) ILL which flows while a low-side power
semiconductor device 13LT formed of a power switching element is turned on is illustrated
by a broken line and arrows.
[0010] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 includes an insulating wiring board
15 having a laminate structure, a high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT
and a low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT arranged on the front surface
of the insulating wiring board 15 in such a way as to be electrically insulated from
each other, a bridge terminal 14B, a high-side terminal 14H, a low-side terminal 17L,
a plurality of bonding wires 18BT as an example of high-side connection means, and
a plurality of bonding wires 18LT as an example of low-side connection means.
[0011] Note that, besides bonding wires, bonding ribbons or clip leads can be used as the
high-side connection means and the low-side connection means. Here, in view of reducing
electrical resistance and parasitic inductance as much as possible, the bonding wires
18BT and 18LT are optimized by increasing the numbers, cross-sectional areas, and
surface areas of the bonding wires 18BT and 18LT and lowering the ground level thereof
as much as possible as long as constraints on processing, mechanical strength, and
long-term fatigue resistance are not deteriorated.
[Insulating Wiring Board 15]
[0012] The insulating wiring board 15 includes a single insulating plate 16 and a plurality
of wiring conductors (12H, 12B, 21L, 12HG, 12HS, 12LG, 12LS) arranged on or above
the front surface of the insulating plate 16 in such a way as to be electrically insulated
from each other. The plurality of wiring conductors are a positive-electrode wiring
conductor 12H, a bridge wiring conductor 12B, a negative-electrode wiring conductor
21L, gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG), and source-signal wiring conductors
(12HS, 12LS).
[0013] The positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H, the bridge wiring conductor 12B, the
gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG), and the source-signal wiring conductors
(12HS, 12LS) are directly joined to the front surface of the insulating plate 16.
The negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L is joined to the front side of the bridge
wiring conductor 12B with an insulating chip 20 interposed therebetween. The negative-electrode
wiring conductor 21L is electrically insulated from the bridge wiring conductor 12B
by the insulating chip 20.
[0014] The insulating plate 16 is formed of, for example, a plate of a ceramic such as silicon
nitride (SiN), aluminum nitride (AlN), or alumina, or a resin sheet with insulation
strength attached to a base plate. In view of reducing the thermal resistance of the
insulating plate 16 as much as possible, the thickness of the insulating plate 16
is desirably set to the minimum thickness that satisfies the insulation strength,
the mechanical strength, and the long-term fatigue resistance. For example, the thickness
of the insulating plate 16 is in the range of 0.2 to 1.5 mm in a case where it is
required to withstand an instantaneous voltage of 1.2 kV. Specifically, in the case
where the insulating plate 16 is an SiN plate, it can be as thin as 0.31 mm, with
the mechanical strength taken into consideration. The insulating chip 20 is similar
to the insulating plate 16.
[0015] Desirably, each of the plurality of wiring conductors (12H, 12B, 21L, 12HG, 12HS,
12LG, 12LS) has a flat plate shape and is formed of, for example, a plate of a metal
such as Cu or Al, and its surface is plated with Ni to be resistant to oxidation.
The bridge terminal 14B, the high-side terminal 14H, and the low-side terminal 17L
are similar to the plurality of wiring conductors (12H, 12B, 21L, 12HG, 12HS, 12LG,
12LS).
[0016] The insulating wiring board 15 may further include a thermal-strain alleviation conductor
22 directly attached to the back surface of the insulating plate 16, in view of preventing
warpage of the board by thermal stress.
[High-Side Power Semiconductor Device (Switch) 13HT and Low-Side Power Semiconductor
Device (Switch) 13LT]
[0017] In the first embodiment, as illustrated in part (c) of Fig. 1, each of the high-side
power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT is
a unipolar power switching element incorporating a reverse conducting diode, e.g.,
a MOSFET, a junction FET, or the like. Each of the high-side power semiconductor device
13HT and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT includes a gate electrode into
which to input a control signal (gate signal) for switching between a state where
conduction is allowed between its front-surface electrode and back-surface electrode
(ON state) and a state where the conduction is shut off (OFF state).
[0018] The high-side power semiconductor device 13HT has its back-surface electrode joined
to the front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H. Specifically, the
front-surface electrode (source or emitter electrode) is formed on the front surface
of the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT, and the back-surface electrode (drain
or collector electrode) is formed on the back surface thereof. The back-surface electrode
of the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT has an ohmic connection to (hereinafter,
simply expressed as "is connected to") the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H
by solder or the like. The front-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor
device 13HT is connected to the bridge wiring conductor 12B by the plurality of bonding
wires 18BT.
[0019] The portions of the plurality of bonding wires 18BT and the bridge wiring conductor
12B connected to each other are situated between the high-side power semiconductor
device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT. Specifically, like the
A-A' cross section illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 1, the connected portions are situated
between the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor
device 13LT in cross-sectional planes extending through both of the semiconductor
devices (13HT, 13LT).
[0020] The low-side power semiconductor device 13LT has its back-surface electrode joined
to the front side of the bridge wiring conductor 12B. Specifically, the front-surface
electrode (source or emitter electrode) is formed on the front surface of the low-side
power semiconductor device 13LT, and the back-surface electrode (drain or collector
electrode) is formed on the back surface thereof. The back-surface electrode of the
low-side power semiconductor device 13LT is connected to one side (right side) of
the bridge wiring conductor 12B by solder or the like. The "one side of the bridge
wiring conductor 12B" refers to the far side thereof from the high-side power semiconductor
device 13HT. The front-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device
13LT is connected to the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L by the plurality
of bonding wires 18LT.
[0021] The portions the plurality of bonding wires 18LT and the negative-electrode wiring
conductor 21L connected to each other are situated between the high-side power semiconductor
device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT. Specifically, like the
A-A' cross section illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 1, the connected portions are situated
between the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor
device 13LT in cross-sectional planes extending through both of the semiconductor
devices (13HT, 13LT).
[0022] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 further includes bonding wires (18HG,
18LG) as gate-signal connection means for connecting the gate electrodes of the semiconductor
devices (13HT, 13LT) and the gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG), and bonding
wires (18HS, 18LS) as source-signal connection means for connecting the source electrodes
of the semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT) and the source-signal wiring conductors
(12HS, 12LS). Note that, besides bonding wires, bonding ribbons or clip leads can
be used as the gate-signal connection means and the source-signal connection means.
[Bridge Terminal 14B, High-Side Terminal 14H, and Low-Side Terminal 17L]
[0023] The bridge terminal 14B is connected to the bridge wiring conductor 12B at a position
between the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor
device 13LT. The high-side terminal 14H is connected to the positive-electrode wiring
conductor 12H at a position between the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT
and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT. The low-side terminal 17L is connected
to the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L at a position between the high-side
power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT.
[0024] In the first embodiment, the high-side terminal 14H, the bridge terminal 14B, and
the low-side terminal 17L are part of the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H,
part of the bridge wiring conductor 12B, and part of the negative-electrode wiring
conductor 21L extended in a direction parallel to the main surface of the insulating
plate 16, respectively. That is, the high-side terminal 14H and the positive-electrode
wiring conductor 12H, the bridge terminal 14B and the bridge wiring conductor 12B,
and the low-side terminal 17L and the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L are
formed integrally with each other. The high-side terminal 14H, the bridge terminal
14B, and the low-side terminal 17L are each extended to the outside of the insulating
plate 16 as viewed from a direction normal to the main surface of the insulating plate
16,.
[0025] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 further includes gate-signal terminals
(14HG, 14LG) connected to the gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG) and source-signal
terminals (14HS, 14LS) connected to the source-signal wiring conductors (12HS, 12LS).
The gate-signal terminals (14HG, 14LG) and the source-signal terminals (14HS, 14LS)
are part of the gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG) and part of the source-signal
wiring conductors (12HS, 12LS) extended in a direction parallel to the main surface
of the insulating plate 16, respectively. In the view from the direction normal to
the main surface of the insulating plate 16, the gate-signal terminals (14HG, 14LG)
and the source-signal terminals (14HS, 14LS) are extended to the outside of the insulating
plate 16.
[0026] The bridge terminal 14B, the high-side terminal 14H, and the low-side terminal 17L
are arranged close and parallel to each other. Similarly, the gate-signal terminal
14HG and the source-signal terminal 14HS are arranged close and parallel to each other,
and the gate-signal terminal 14LG and the source-signal terminal 14LS are arranged
close and parallel to each other. The direction in which each terminal (14B, 14H,
17L) is extended is perpendicular to the direction in which the plurality of bonding
wires (18BT, 18LT) are extended.
[0027] The high-side terminal 14H and the bridge terminal 14B, and the bridge terminal 14B
and the low-side terminal 17L can be arranged as close as possible in distance to
each other as far as the design rules for electric discharge prevention and manufacturing
method allow. An insulating material (not illustrated) is desirably sandwiched between
the high-side terminal 14H and the bridge terminal 14B and between the bridge terminal
14B and the low-side terminal 17L in view of preventing electric discharge and preventing
contact.
[0028] In this embodiment, the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side
power semiconductor device 13LT are expected to be controlled to be exclusively turned
on. However, the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power
semiconductor device 13LT can be simultaneously turned on (grounded).
[Method of Manufacturing Half-Bridge Power Semiconductor Module 1]
[0029] Next, an example of the method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 1 in Fig. 1 will be described with reference to part (a) to part (e) of Fig.
2.
[0030] In the first step are prepared an insulating wiring board illustrated in part (a)
of Fig. 2, the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT illustrated in part (b) of
Fig. 2, the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT illustrated in part (c) of Fig.
2, and the insulating chip 20 with the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L joined
thereto illustrated in part (d) of Fig. 2. The insulating wiring board illustrated
in part (a) of Fig. 2 has the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H, the bridge
wiring conductor 12B, the gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG), and the source-signal
wiring conductors (12HS, 12LS) joined to the front surface of the insulating plate
16. Note that part of each wiring conductor (12H, 12B, 12HG, 12LG, 12HS, 12LS, 21L)
is extended as a terminal (14H, 14B, 14HG, 14LG, 14HS, 14LS, 17L) to the outside of
the insulating plate 16.
[0031] The insulating wiring board is thoroughly washed at least on its front surface with
an organic solvent such as acetone or ethanol. The back surfaces of the power semiconductor
devices (13HT, 13LT) and the back surface of the insulating chip 20 have undergone
a metallization that allows soldering. Meanwhile, today, the above insulating wiring
board and the insulating chip 20 can be obtained by placing an order to a ceramic
board manufacturer with drawings. The power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT) can
be obtained from a semiconductor manufacturer.
[0032] In the second step, as illustrated in part (e) of Fig. 2, the back-surface electrode
of the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT is joined to the front side of the
positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H and the back-surface electrode of the low-side
power semiconductor device 13LT is joined to the front side of the bridge wiring conductor
12B by using a vacuum reflow apparatus, for example. Then, the negative-electrode
wiring conductor 21L is joined to the front side of the bridge wiring conductor 12B
between the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor
device 13LT with the insulating chip 20 interposed between the negative-electrode
wiring conductor 21L and the bridge wiring conductor 12B. In doing so, a carbon positioning
jig is desirably used for accurate positioning of the power semiconductor devices
(13HT, 13LT) and the insulating chip 20. Note that the joining method is not limited
to soldering. It is also possible to use a joining method using an electrically conductive
adhesive, a joining method using submicron particles of a conductor such as Ag or
Cu, a solid-phase (or liquid-phase) diffusion bonding method, or the like.
[0033] Lastly in the third step, the front-surface electrodes (source electrodes, gate electrodes)
of the power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT) and the wiring conductors (12B, 12HG,
12HS, 21L, 12LG, 12LS) are connected with the bonding wires (18BT, 18HG, 18HS, 18LT,
18LG, 18LS) by using a wire bonding apparatus. Consequently, the half-bridge power
semiconductor module 1 in Fig. 1 is completed.
[Comparative Example]
[0034] Next, operations and advantageous effects achieved by the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 1 in Fig. 1 will be described with reference to a comparative example illustrated
in Fig. 21.
[0035] In recent years, next-generation power conversion devices (inverters and converters)
that are actuated via high-speed switching in a high-voltage range of 600 V to 1.8
kV have been actively developed with the advent of power semiconductor devices (such
as MOSFET, JFET, and SBD) using wide-bandgap semiconductors such as silicon carbide
(SiC) and gallium nitride (GaN) and power Si-MOSFETs with super junction structures.
These power semiconductor devices are capable of high-speed switching actuation of
course because they are devices that perform unipolar operation at high voltage. A
first benefit of the high-speed switching actuation is that the switching loss of
the power semiconductor devices is reduced, thereby enhancing the conversion efficiency.
However, what is more important in practice is a second benefit that the reduction
in switching loss accordingly prevents the conversion efficiency from dropping and
allows the switching frequency (or carrier frequency) to be raised. This is because
if the switching frequency is raised, large passive parts such as coupling capacitors
and reactors can be smaller in volume, which leads to reduction in dimension and cost
of the power conversion devices.
[0036] Meanwhile, power modules have been known which include one or more half-bridge (power)
circuits housed within a single package as a main circuit of a power conversion device
for controlling a large inductive load such as a motor, an inductor, or a transformer.
Each of these half-bridge (power) circuits is a circuit including two power semiconductor
device chips connected in series with a middle point in their connection configured
as an output terminal.
[0037] In some cases, however, switching this half-bridge (power) circuit at high speed
causes the following problems (1) to (3).
[0038]
- (1) A high surge voltage (or overshoot voltage) is generated at a moment of turning
off a power semiconductor device from an ON state, which increases the switching loss.
- (2) In the worst case, this surge voltage breaks the power semiconductor device.
- (3) To avoid this risk, a power semiconductor device capable of withstanding higher
voltage may be employed, which increases the conduction loss and then increases the
manufacturing cost.
[0039] The above problems is caused by a reverse voltage induced by a parasitic inductance
(self-inductance) Ls generated in a module wiring path through which a principal current
(load current) flows, and an abrupt change in current (di/dt) (= -Ls × di/dt).
[0040] One method of reducing the parasitic inductance of a wiring is an electromagnetic
method in which a transconductance effect obtained by causing currents to flow in
opposite directions through outgoing and incoming wirings arranged close to each other
is used to reduce the parasitic inductance (see Patent Literatures 1 and 2). Specifically,
on the back surface of an insulating board with a bridge circuit formed on its front
surface, a parallel wiring plate is provided which is set at the same potential as
the high-side potential or the low-side potential. A principal current is caused to
flow through the parallel wiring plate in the direction opposite to the front-surface
principal current, so that "close and parallel counterflows" are generated.
[0041] Fig. 21 illustrates a comparative example in which this electromagnetic method is
applied to reduce the parasitic inductance in a half-bridge power module 1000. In
the half-bridge power module 1000, an insulating wiring board 115 includes a first
insulating plate 116 and a second insulating plate 121. Front-surface wiring conductors
(112H, 112B, 112L1, 112L2) are provided on the front surface of the first insulating
plate 116, a middle wiring conductor 117L is provided between the first insulating
plate 116 and the second insulating plate 121, and a thermal-stress alleviation conductor
122 is provided on the back surface of the second insulating plate 121. Connection
conductors (120L1, 120L2) are buried in openings penetrating through the first insulating
plate 116. The connection conductor 120L1 connects the front-surface wiring conductor
112L1 and the middle wiring conductor 117L, and the connection conductor 120L2 connects
the front-surface wiring conductor 112L2 and the middle wiring conductor 117L.
[0042] A high-side terminal 114H is provided to the front-surface wiring conductor 112H,
a low-side terminal 114L is provided to the front-surface wiring conductor 112L1,
and a bridge terminal 114B is provided to the front-surface wiring conductor 112B.
[0043] The back-surface electrode (drain electrode) of a high-side power semiconductor device
(switching element) 113HT is joined to the front-surface wiring conductor 112H, and
the back-surface electrode (drain electrode) of a low-side power semiconductor device
(switching element) 113L is joined to the front-surface wiring conductor 112B. A front-surface
electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device 113HT is connected to the front-surface
wiring conductor 112B by bonding wires 118B. A front-surface electrode of the low-side
power semiconductor device 113LT is connected to the front-surface wiring conductor
112L2 by bonding wires 118L.
[0044] Here, in the structure of the power module 1000 in Fig. 21, the middle wiring conductor
117L and the second insulating plate 121 are inserted between the first insulating
plate 116 and the thermal-stress alleviation conductor 122. This makes the thermal
resistance of the insulating wiring board 115 higher than a simple insulating board
with an insulating plate and conducting plates attached to its both surfaces, which
is widely used today. Thus, there has been a problem of poor heat dissipation of the
power semiconductor devices (113HT, 113LT), that is, high joint temperature. Meanwhile,
the second insulating plate 121 affects the thermal resistance more greatly than the
middle wiring conductor 117L since the thermal conductivity of the second insulating
plate 121 is significantly low.
[Operations and Advantageous Effects of First Embodiment]
[0045] A principal current flowing through the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H and
a principal current flowing through the plurality of bonding wires 18BT are equal
to each other in magnitude and are opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
Also, a principal current flowing through the bridge wiring conductor 12B and a principal
current flowing through the plurality of bonding wires 18LT are equal to each other
in magnitude and are opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
[0046] The bridge terminal 14B, the high-side terminal 14H, and the low-side terminal 17L
are arranged close and parallel to each other. A principal current flowing through
the high-side terminal 14H and a principal current flowing through the bridge terminal
14B are equal to each other in magnitude and are opposite and parallel to each other
in direction. A principal current flowing through the low-side terminal 17L and a
principal current through the bridge terminal 14B are equal to each other in magnitude
and are opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
[0047] Further, the direction of the principal current flowing through the positive-electrode
wiring conductor 12H and the direction of the principal current flowing through the
high-side terminal 14H are substantially perpendicular to each other. The direction
of the principal current flowing through the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L
and the direction of the principal current flowing through the low-side terminal 17L
are substantially perpendicular to each other.
[0048] By directing the principal currents in this manner, the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 1 in Fig. 1 can achieve a parasitic inductance as low as or lower than that
of the half-bridge power module 1000 in Fig. 21.
[0049] Further, since the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in Fig. 1 includes a
single-layer insulating plate 16, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 can
achieve a parasitic inductance as low as or lower than that of the half-bridge power
module 1000 in Fig. 21 and, in addition, achieve a thermal resistance as low as that
of a conventional half-bridge power semiconductor module using an insulating wiring
board including a single-layer insulating plate (the thermal resistance of the insulating
wiring board).
[0050] First, the reason why the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in the first embodiment
can achieve a thermal resistance as low as that of the conventional half-bridge power
semiconductor module. Generally, Joule heat generated by a power semiconductor device
propagates vertically toward a heat radiator coupled to the back of its insulating
wiring board. The total thermal resistance of members forming the path of this propagation
is the thermal resistance of the insulating wiring board.
[0051] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in the first embodiment has the same
vertical structure as the conventional half-bridge power semiconductor module, as
is clear from the cross-sectional structure in part (b) of Fig. 1. That is, the half-bridge
power semiconductor module 1 in the first embodiment uses the insulating wiring board
15 with the single-layer insulating plate 16. Thus, the thermal resistance of the
insulating wiring board 15 according to the first embodiment can be considered equal
to the thermal resistance of the conventional insulating wiring board. As described
in equation (1), where Rth_C1 is the thermal resistance of the wiring conductors (12H,
12B), Rth_I1 is the thermal resistance of the insulating plate 16, Rth_C2 is the thermal
resistance of the thermal-stress alleviation conductor 22, the thermal resistance,
or Rth_sub, of the insulating wiring board 15 is these thermal resistances connected
in series.

[0052] The thermal resistance Rth_sub of the insulating wiring board, described in equation
(1), is equal to that of the conventional half-bridge power semiconductor module using
an insulating wiring board including a single-layer insulating plate.
[0053] In contrast, the thermal resistance Rth_sub of the comparative example (Fig. 21)
can be expressed by equation (2), where Rth_Cm and Rth_I2 are the thermal resistances
of the middle wiring conductor 117L and the second insulating plate 121, respectively.

[0054] Here, as is clear from a comparison between equation (1) and equation (2), the thermal
resistance of the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in the first embodiment
is lower than that of the comparative example (Fig. 21) by the thermal resistances
of the middle wiring conductor 117L and the second insulating plate 121 (Rth_Cm +
Rth_I2). Hence, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in the first embodiment
is also mathematically understood as having thermally superior performance.
[0055] Next, three reasons why the half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 in the first
embodiment can achieve a parasitic inductance as low as or lower than that of the
comparative example (Fig. 21) will be described.
[0056] To start with, the first reason is as follows. As illustrated in Fig. 1, while, for
example, the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT is turned on, a principal current
ILL indicated by arrows and dotted lines flows in the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 1. The principal current ILL flows into the module from the bridge terminal
14B, flows through the bridge wiring conductor 12B, turns back at the low-side power
semiconductor device 13LT, flows through the plurality of bonding wires 18LT and the
negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L, and flows out of the module from the low-side
terminal 17L. As described above, while the low-side power semiconductor device 13L
is turned on, principal currents (ILL) that are equal in magnitude and opposite in
direction circulate at mutually close positions in almost all points including the
terminals (14B, 14L). Thus, a configuration that allows "close and parallel counterflows"
of principal currents (ILL) is obtained at almost all regions in the principal-current
flow path. This makes it possible to ideally electromagnetically reduce the parasitic
inductance Ls generated in the flow path of the principal current which flows while
the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT is turned on.
[0057] A principal current ILH illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 3 represents a principal
current which flows while the high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in
Fig. 1 is turned on. A principal current (loop current) ILL illustrated in part (b)
of Fig. 3 represents a principal current (loop current) which flows while the diode
incorporated in the low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT in Fig. 1 is
reverse conduction. A principal current (loop current) ILH illustrated in part (c)
of Fig. 3 represents a principal current (loop current) which flows during reverse
conduction of the diode incorporated in the high-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13HT in Fig. 1. A "close and parallel counterflow" configuration is likewise obtained
for the principal currents (ILH, ILL) illustrated in part (a) to part (c) of Fig.
3 at almost all regions in the flow paths of these principal currents. This makes
it possible to ideally electromagnetically reduce the parasitic inductances Ls generated
in the flow paths of the principal currents.
[0058] Further, in the steady states illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 1 and part (a) to part
(c) of Fig. 3, close and parallel counterflows are generated individually on each
of the high-side block and the low-side block. Thus, even in a transient state where
the switching state changes (a moment of turning on or off a power semiconductor device),
close and parallel counterflows can be generated irrespective of the type of the load.
For example, in a transient state where the low-side power semiconductor device 13L
is turned off, the close and parallel counterflows illustrated in part (b) of Fig.
1 and the close and parallel counterflows illustrated in part (c) of Fig. 3 are generated
simultaneously. It can be seen that, in such a transient state too, the principal
currents branched to the high side and the low side generate close and parallel counterflows
at their respective sides. This applies to the other transient states, that is, when
the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT is turned on and when the high-side power
semiconductor device 13HT is turned off or turned on. This operation can significantly
effectively reduce not only the voltage surge that occurs in the transient states
but also current ringing.
[0059] In contrast, the structure of the power module in the comparative example (Fig. 21)
inevitably includes sections where "close and parallel counterflows" of principal
currents are incomplete. The structure thus has a problem that the parasitic inductance
Ls cannot be reduced as desired and therefore the voltage surge cannot be reduced
as desired either. The influence of this is severer for loads in which resistive components
are dominant.
[0060] To specifically describe this, a broken line ILL and the arrows thereon in Fig. 21
illustrate the flow of a principal current (load current) while the low-side power
semiconductor device 113LT is turned on. The principal current (ILL) is inputted into
the power module from the bridge terminal 114B, flows through the front-surface wiring
conductor 112B, the low-side power semiconductor device 113LT, the bonding wire 118L,
the front-surface wiring conductor 112L2, the connection conductor 120L2, the middle
wiring conductor 117L, the connection conductor 120L1, and the front-surface wiring
conductor 112L1, and is outputted from the low-side terminal 114L. Here, in a first
section G1 in Fig. 21, the principal current (ILL) flowing on the front-surface side
of the insulating board 115 and the principal current (ILL) flowing on the back-surface
side of the insulating board 115 are directed in opposite directions. The principal
currents can thus bring out the "close and parallel counterflow" effect and therefore
achieve a low parasitic inductance Ls. On the other hand, in a second section G2 next
to the first section G1, the principal current (ILL) flows only through the middle
wiring conductor 117L. Thus, the principal current does not bring out the "close and
parallel counterflow" effect, so that a large parasitic inductance Ls is generated
in the second section G2.
[0061] A broken line ILH and the arrows thereon in Fig. 21 illustrate the flow of a principal
current (load current) while the high-side power semiconductor device 113HT is turned
on. The principal current (ILH) is inputted into the power module from the high-side
terminal 114H, flows through the front-surface wiring conductor 112H, the high-side
power semiconductor device 113HT, the bonding wire 118B, and the front-surface wiring
conductor 112B, and is outputted from the bridge terminal 114B. It should be noted
here that the principal current (ILH) does not at all flows through the middle wiring
conductor 117L and does not therefore bring out the "close and parallel counterflow"
effect. That is, the parasitic inductance Ls in the current path (114H, 112H, 113HT,
118B, 112B, 114B) of the principal current (ILH) is high while the high-side semiconductor
device 113H is turned on.
[0062] Likewise, the parasitic inductance in the second section G2 is also large when the
high-side power semiconductor device 113HT or the low-side power semiconductor device
113LT is in a commutation mode.
[0063] As described above, the first embodiment does not have the section G2 in the comparative
example, in which "close and parallel counterflow" cannot be generated. For this reason,
the first embodiment can reduce the parasitic inductance Ls more effectively than
the comparative example under any load conditions.
[0064] The second reason why a low parasitic inductance can be achieved is that the principal-current
flow path is shorter than the comparative example. In the comparative example (Fig.
21), two connection ports (connection conductors 120L1 and 120L2) need to be provided
in the first insulating plate 116 in order to cause a principal current to flow through
the middle wiring conductor 117L. This makes the principal-current flow path longer
than the first embodiment (part (b) of Fig. 1), which does include such connection
ports. A shorter current flow path effects a reduction in parasitic inductance, and
the first embodiment can therefore make the parasitic inductance smaller than the
comparative example. Also, making the principal-current flow path shorter than the
comparative example can bring about an advantageous effect that the module's dimension
can be reduced.
[0065] The third reason why a low parasitic inductance can be achieved is that the distance
between two principal currents flowing opposite and parallel to each other (outgoing
current and incoming current) is short. The two principal currents in the comparative
example (Fig. 21) have the insulating plate 116 therebetween. On the other hand, the
two principal currents in the first embodiment (part (b) of Fig. 1) do not have the
insulating plate 16 therebetween. In the first embodiment, the two principal currents
(outgoing current and incoming current) is closer by the thickness of the insulating
plate 116. With the effect of this closeness, the first embodiment can make the parasitic
inductance smaller than the comparative example.
[0066] The operations and advantageous effects mentioned above apply to other embodiments
and modifications to be described below.
[Modification 1]
[0067] Besides the above, the first embodiment has an advantageous effect unique thereto.
The high-side terminal 14H, the low-side terminal 17L, and the bridge terminal 14B
are gathered in one spot and lead out from a side surface of the insulating wiring
board 15. In this way, a snubber capacitor (or a decoupling capacitor) can be easily
provided between the high-side terminal 14H and the bridge terminal 14B and between
the bridge terminal 14B and the low-side terminal 17L.
[0068] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 1 may further include at least one of
a high-side snubber capacitor 25HB connected between the high-side terminal 14H and
the bridge terminal 14B at the main surface of the insulating plate 16, and a low-side
snubber capacitor 25LB connected between the bridge terminal 14B and the low-side
terminal 17L at the main surface of the insulating plate 16. As illustrated in Fig.
4, these snubber capacitors can be easily provided in the module and on the respective
terminals. By providing the snubber capacitors, it is possible to suppress surge voltages
generated by parasitic inductance components around the high-side terminal 14H and
the low-side terminal 17L.
[0069] A half-bridge power semiconductor module 1' illustrated in Fig. 4 is a modification
in which the snubber capacitors (25HB, 25LB) are installed in the module. The snubber
capacitor 25HB capacitively connects the high-side terminal 14H and the bridge terminal
14B with solder or the like near their connections to the positive-electrode wiring
conductor 12H and the bridge wiring conductor 12B. Similarly, the snubber capacitor
25LB capacitively connects the low-side terminal 17L and the bridge terminal 14B with
solder or the like near their connections to the negative-electrode wiring conductor
21L and the bridge wiring conductor 12B. A metal spacer 27 connects between the bridge
terminal 14B and the low-side terminal 17L. Solder is used for the connection between
the bridge terminal 14B and the metal spacer 27 and the connection between the metal
space 27 and the snubber capacitor 25LB. The other features of the configuration are
the same as Fig. 1, and description thereof will therefore be omitted.
[0070] In modification 1, the snubber capacitors (25HB, 25LB) are mounted near the connections
to the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H, the bridge wiring conductor 12B, and
the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L. In this way, surge voltages resulting
from the parasitic inductances in the respective terminals (14H, 14B, 17L) can be
absorbed. This makes it possible to further reduce the surge voltages applied the
power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT).
[0071] In contrast, in the comparative example (Fig. 21), the bridge terminal is located
at a position far from the high-side terminal and the low-side terminal. Hence, it
is difficult to install snubber capacitors inside the module, and they have to be
provided outside the module. With the snubber capacitors provided outside the module,
however, it is impossible to absorb the voltage surge occurring due to the parasitic
inductances around the bridge terminal, the high-side terminal, and the low-side terminal.
[Second Embodiment]
[0072] In the first embodiment and modification 1, the cases have been discussed in which
each of the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor
device 13LT is a switching element (i.e. a transistor such as an MOSFET or a JFET).
However, one of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor
device may be a diode and the other may be a transistor and, even in this case, it
is still possible to reduce the parasitic inductance Ls and consequently reduce the
surge voltage generated upon turning on the transistor.
[0073] In a second embodiment, a half-bridge power semiconductor module 2 including a diode
on one side and a transistor on the other side will be described, which is widely
used for DC-DC converters called step-down choppers and step-up choppers.
[0074] The configuration of the half-bridge power semiconductor module 2 according to the
second embodiment will be described with reference to Fig. 5. Part (a) of Fig. 5 is
a plan view, part (b) of Fig. 5 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 5, and part (c) of Fig. 5 is a circuit diagram of the
half-bridge power semiconductor module 2.
[0075] One of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor
device is a power switching element, and the other is a power diode. Specifically,
the half-bridge power semiconductor module 2 includes a high-speed freewheeling power
diode 13LD arranged on the front surface of a bridge wiring conductor 12B as the low-side
power semiconductor device. The high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD is formed
of a Schottky diode or a high-speed pn diode, for example. The back-surface electrode
(cathode) of the high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD is die-bonded to the front
surface of the bridge wiring conductor 12B with solder or the like. On the other hand,
a front-surface electrode (anode) of the high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD
is connected to a negative-electrode wiring conductor 12L by a plurality of bonding
wires 18LD. Bonding ribbons or clip leads may be used instead of bonding wires. A
high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT may be a unipolar switch as in
the first embodiment or a bipolar switch. Also, a reverse conducting diode does not
necessarily have to be included.
[0076] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 2 includes an insulating wiring board
31. Since the high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD does not include a gate electrode,
the insulating wiring board 31 does not include a low-side gate-signal wiring conductor
(12LG) or source-signal wiring conductor (12LS). Besides this point, the configuration
of the insulating wiring board 31 is the same as the insulating wiring board 15 in
part (a) of Fig. 1. The insulating wiring board 31 does not include low-side bonding
wires (18LG, 18LS) or signal terminals (14LG, 14LS) either.
[0077] For the other reference signs, the configuration is the same as Fig. 1, and description
thereof will therefore be omitted. Generally, in the case of a step-down chopper,
a DC power source's positive electrode is connected to the high-side terminal 14H,
the DC power source's negative electrode is connected to the low-side terminal 14L,
and an energy storing coil and a smoothing capacitor connected in series are connected
between the bridge terminal 14B and the low-side terminal 14L. A DC voltage stepped
down is outputted from both ends of this smoothing capacitor.
[0078] Meanwhile, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 2 in Fig. 5 can be manufactured
by the same method as the manufacturing method in the first embodiment, which has
been described with reference to part (a) to part (e) of Fig. 2. It is, however, assumed
that the insulating wiring board 15 in part (a) to part (e) of Fig. 2 is replaced
with the insulating wiring board 31, the low-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13LT is replaced with the high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD, the bonding wires
18LT are replaced with the bonding wires 18LD, and the wiring conductors (12LG, 12LS),
the bonding wire (18LG, 18LS), and the signal terminal (14LG, 14LS) are removed.
[0079] Advantageous effects of the second embodiment will be described. A principal current
(load current) ILH which flows while the high-side power semiconductor device 13H
is turned on is the same as that in part (a) of Fig. 3 and achieves an advantageous
effect similar to that described in the first embodiment. Moreover, as illustrated
in Fig. 5, a principal current (load current) ILL flows through the high-speed freewheeling
power diode (low-side power semiconductor device) 13LD after the high-side power semiconductor
device 13H is turned off. The principal current (load current) ILL illustrated in
Fig. 5 is the same as that in part (b) of Fig. 1 and provides an advantageous effect
similar to that described in the first embodiment. Further, the "close and opposite
counterflows" illustrated in part (a) and the "close and opposite counterflows" illustrated
in part (b) of Fig. 3 are generated simultaneously in a transient state where the
high-side power semiconductor device 13H is turned on or turned off. In this transient
state too, "close and opposite counterflows" are generated individually at each of
the high-side region and the low-side region. This brings about an advantageous effect
that the parasitic inductance is reduced and the surge voltage is reduced accordingly.
[Third Embodiment]
[0080] Depending on a half-bridge power semiconductor module's attribute or application,
there are cases where a high-speed freewheeling power diode FWD (Schottky diode or
high-speed pn diode) needs to be connected in anti-parallel to its high-side power
semiconductor device (switch) or low-side power semiconductor device (switch). These
cases include, for example: when the power semiconductor device is a bipolar power
semiconductor device (switch) like an IGBT, in which it is in principle difficult
to implement reverse conduction; when the power semiconductor device (switch) is a
unipolar type but does not incorporate a reverse conducting diode; when the reverse
conducting diode incorporated in the power semiconductor device (switch) cannot cause
sufficient current to flow or the reverse conduction of the incorporated diode is
not desired; and so on. As will be discussed below, the present invention is also
applicable to such cases.
[0081] In a third embodiment, the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side
power semiconductor device may both be formed of a power switching element and a high-speed
freewheeling power diode as a pair connected in anti-parallel.
[0082] Fig. 6 illustrates the configuration of a half-bridge power semiconductor module
3 according to the third embodiment of the present invention. Part (a) of Fig. 6 is
a plan view, part (b) of Fig. 6 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 6, and part (c) of Fig. 6 is a circuit diagram of the
half-bridge power semiconductor module 3. A cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 6 is the same as part (b) of Fig. 5, and illustration
thereof will therefore be omitted.
[0083] At least one of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor
device includes a power switching element (13HT, 13LT) and a power diode (13HD, 13LD)
connected in anti-parallel to the power switching element.
[0084] Specifically, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 3 includes a high-side power
semiconductor device (switch) 13HT and a high-side power semiconductor device (diode)
13HD. The back-surface electrodes of the high-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13HT and the high-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13HD are joined to a positive-electrode
wiring conductor 12H. Between the high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT
and the high-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13HD, a slit 26H is formed which
partitions the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H into a switch region 12H(T)
and a diode region 12H(D).
[0085] Similarly, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 3 includes a low-side power
semiconductor device (switch) 13LT and a low-side power semiconductor device (diode)
13LD. The back-surface electrodes of the low-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13LT and the low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD are joined to a bridge
wiring conductor 12B. Between the low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT
and the low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD, a slit 26B is formed which
partitions the bridge wiring conductor 12B into a switch region 12B(T) and a diode
region 12B(D).
[0086] By providing the slits (26H, 26B), the following operations and advantageous effects
are achieved. Specifically, with the slit 26H, the centroidal line of a load current
flowing through the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H(T) (or 12H(D)) and the
centroidal line of a load current flowing through a plurality of bonding wires 18HT
(or 18HD) in the opposite direction are close to each other (or overlap each other).
Accordingly, the parasitic inductance can be further reduced. Similarly, with the
slit 26B, the centroidal line of a load current flowing through the bridge wiring
conductor 12B(T) (or 12B(D)) and the centroidal line of a load current flowing through
a plurality of bonding wires 18LT (or 18LD) in the opposite direction are close to
each other (or overlap each other). Accordingly, the parasitic inductance can be further
reduced.
[0087] The high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT and the high-side power semiconductor
device (diode) 13HD are die-bonded to predetermined positions in the switch region
12H(T) and the diode region 12H(D), respectively, by using solder or the like. The
low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT and the low-side power semiconductor
device (diode) 13LD are die-bonded to predetermined positions in the switch region
12B(T) and the diode region 12B(D), respectively. The other constituent members are
the same as those in Fig. 1 or Fig. 5, and description thereof will be omitted.
[0088] To facilitate understanding, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 3 will be
discussed by individually focusing on a region 32A and a region 32B. Each of the regions
is the same as the second embodiment, in which one of the high side and the low side
is a switch (power semiconductor device) and the other is a diode (power semiconductor
device). For this reason, the flow of a principal current (load current) while the
switch (13HT, 13LT) is turned on or turned off, and the flow of a principal current
(load current) while the diode (13HD, 13LD) is in reverse conduction (commutation)
are exactly the same as the second embodiment and are close and parallel counterflows,
including transient states. Also, the configurations of the input-output terminals
(14H, 14B, 17L) are the same as the second embodiment as well. Then, the third embodiment
can simultaneously reduce the parasitic inductance and the thermal resistance in the
module as in the second embodiment and thus as in the first embodiment.
[0089] Now, modifications of the third embodiment or some useful modifications applicable
to all of the first to third embodiments will be described.
[Modification 2]
[0090] Fig. 7 illustrates the configuration of a half-bridge power semiconductor module
3-1 according to modification 2 of the third embodiment. Part (a) of Fig. 7 is a plan
view, and part (b) of Fig. 7 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 7. A cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 7 is the same as part (b) of Fig. 1 and the circuit
diagram is the same as part (c) of Fig. 6, and illustration thereof will therefore
be omitted.
[0091] Differences between the half-bridge power semiconductor module 3-1 and the half-bridge
power semiconductor module 3 in Fig. 6 will be described. The first difference is
that the position of the low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT and the
position of the low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD are switched. With
the positions switched as above, the arrangement of the high side and the arrangement
of the low side are substantially symmetric about the input-output terminals (14H,
14B, 17L). This brings about an advantageous effect that the overall balance of parasitic
inductance between the high side and the low side can be better than Fig. 6. Also,
by the above change, the low-side gate-signal terminal 14LG and the source-signal
terminal 14LS are moved to the lower side, thereby leaving an empty space on the upper
side. Thus, the change brings about the advantage that dimensions of the insulating
wiring board (module) 31 can be smaller. Note that the manufacturing steps are the
same as the first embodiment (Fig. 2), and description thereof will therefore be omitted.
[0092] Meanwhile, the half-bridge power semiconductor modules (3, 3-1) can be used in applications
involving continually outputting electric pulses of the same polarity like DC-DC converters
that perform PWM and PWM inverters that output sinusoidal waveforms. In this case,
an operation is repeated in which the switch on one side (e.g. high side) is turned
on or turned off and the diode on the other side (e.g. low side) is caused to perform
commutation. In the case of such an operation mode, the configuration of the third
embodiment (Fig. 6) has a less adverse influence of unbalanced parasitic inductances
than modification 2 and is therefore superior thereto. As can be understood from this
example, an embodiment or a modification thereof which is best for the application
should be selected, and this policy is applied to all embodiments.
[0093] In at least one of the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H and the bridge wiring
conductor 12B, the slit (26H, 26B) is formed as a partition between the power switching
element (13HT, 13LT) and the power diode (13HD, 13LD). This allows a good overall
balance of parasitic inductance between the high side and the low side.
[Modification 3]
[0094] Fig. 8 illustrates the configuration of a half-bridge power semiconductor module
3-2 according to modification 3 of the third embodiment. Part (a) of Fig. 8 is a plan
view, and part (b) of Fig. 8 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 8. As illustrated in Fig. 8, all high-side power semiconductor
devices (13HT, 13HD) and all low-side power semiconductor devices (13LD, 13LT) are
arranged sideways in a line on the insulating wiring board 15 (or 31). All power semiconductor
devices (13HT, 13HD, 13LT, 13LD) are arranged in a single straight line perpendicular
to the input-output terminals (14H, 14B, 17L). In this way, modification 3 can provide
a power semiconductor module having a short depth.
[0095] The positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H is extended in a direction perpendicular
to the input-output terminals (14H, 14B, 17L), and the high-side power semiconductor
device (switch) 13HT and the high-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13HD are
die-bonded side by side to the front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor
12H. Similarly, the bridge wiring conductor 12B is extended in the direction perpendicular
to the input-output terminals (14H, 14B, 17L), and the low-side power semiconductor
device (diode) 13LD and the low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT are
die-bonded side by side to the front side of the bridge wiring conductor 12B. A plurality
of bonding wires 18H link a front-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor
device (switch) 13HT, a front-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor
device (diode) 13HD, and the bridge wiring conductor 12B. A plurality of bonding wires
18L link a front-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13LT, a front-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device (diode)
13LD, and the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L. In Fig. 8, the plurality of
bonding wires (18H, 18L) are depicted as sticking bonding wires. In this way, the
power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13HD, 13LT, 13LD) can be arranged sideways in a
line.
[0096] The members with the other reference signs are their roles are the same as those
with the same reference signs in the first to third embodiments and their modifications,
and description thereof will therefore be omitted. Also, the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 3-2 according to modification 3 can be manufactured using the same method as
the first embodiment (Fig. 2), and description of the manufacturing steps will therefore
be omitted.
[0097] As illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 8, in modification 3 too, the insulating wiring
board 15 includes a single-layer insulating plate 16, as in the first to third embodiments
and their modifications. Thus, it is possible to achieve a thermal resistance as low
as the first to third embodiments and their modifications. Hence, the thermal resistance
is lower and the heat dissipation is better than the comparative example (Fig. 21),
which includes a two-layer insulating plate.
[0098] Fig. 8 and part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 9 illustrate principal currents (load currents)
ILH and ILL in the half-bridge power semiconductor module 3-2 according to modification
3. Fig. 8 illustrates a principal current ILL which flows while the low-side power
semiconductor device (switch) 13LT is turned on. Part (a) of Fig. 9 illustrates a
principal current ILH which flows while the high-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13HT in Fig. 8 is turned on. Part (b) of Fig. 9 illustrates a principal current (loop
current) ILL which flows through the low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD
in Fig. 8. Part (c) of Fig. 9 illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILH which
flows through the high-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13HD in Fig. 8. As
is clear from Fig. 8 and part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 9, the principal currents (loop
currents) ILH and ILL are close and parallel counter flows in all electric conduction
modes.
[0099] As described above, two or more high-side power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13HD)
are aligned in one direction in such a way as to share a flow path for the principal
currents (ILH) flowing through each of the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H
and the plurality of bonding wires 18H. In this way, the principal currents (loop
currents) ILH can generate close and parallel counterflows.
[0100] As described above, two or more low-side power semiconductor devices (13LT, 13LD)
are aligned in one direction in such a way as to share a flow path for the principal
currents (ILL) flowing through each of the bridge wiring conductor 12B and the plurality
of bonding wires 18L. In this way, the principal currents (loop currents) ILL can
generate close and parallel counterflows.
[Modification 4]
[0101] Modification 4 is an example applicable to all of the first to third embodiments
and their modifications, and is an example effective in reducing the parasitic inductances
around the input-output terminals (14H, 14B, 17L). Modification 4 applied to the third
embodiment (Fig. 6) will be described with reference to Fig. 10.
[0102] In a half-bridge power semiconductor module 3-3 illustrated in Fig. 10, high-side
terminals (14H1, 14H2) are part of the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H extended
in two opposite directions parallel to the main surface of the insulating plate 16.
Similarly, bridge terminals (14B1, 14B2) are part of the bridge wiring conductor 12B
extended in two opposite directions parallel to the main surface of the insulating
plate 16. Low-side terminals (17L1, 17L2) are part of the negative-electrode wiring
conductor 21L in two opposite directions parallel to the main surface of the insulating
plate 16.
[0103] A cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig.
10 is the same as part (b) of Fig. 5, and a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 10 is the same as part (b) of Fig. 6. The other reference
signs are the same as the third embodiment (Fig. 6), and description thereof will
therefore be omitted.
[0104] The method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 3-3, illustrated
in Fig. 10, is the same as the manufacturing method in the third embodiment, and description
therefore will therefore be omitted.
[0105] As illustrated in Fig. 10, in modification 4, two high-side terminals, two bridge
terminals, and two low-side terminals are provided. In this way, it is possible to
split the flow of each principal current (ILH, ILL) flowing into or out of the power
module into two flows while maintaining a close and parallel counterflow around each
terminal. Splitting a principal current into two flows is electromagnetically equivalent
to reducing the parasitic inductance around each terminal by half. That is, in addition
to the parasitic-inductance reduction effect of the third embodiment, modification
4 has an excellent advantageous effect that the parasitic inductances generated around
the input-output terminals for principal currents can be approximately half of the
third embodiment.
[0106] Note that in modification 4 too, the insulating wiring board 15 includes a single-layer
insulating plate 16, and therefore a thermal resistance as low as that of a conventional
power semiconductor module is achieved. Hence, the thermal resistance is lower and
the heat dissipation is better than the comparative example (Fig. 21), which includes
a two-layer insulating plate.
[Fourth Embodiment]
[0107] In the first to third embodiments and their modifications, the high-side terminal
14H, the bridge terminal 14B, and the low-side terminal 17L are part of the positive-electrode
wiring conductor 12H, part of the bridge wiring conductor 12B, and part of the negative-electrode
wiring conductor 21L extended in parallel to the front surface of the insulating plate
16 beyond its outer edge, respectively. However, these input-output terminals are
not limited to these extended-wiring terminal structures (14H, 14B, 17L). It is also
possible to lead out the input-output terminals in a direction perpendicular to the
front surface of the insulating plate 16 with the low parasitic-inductance property
of the input-output terminals maintained. Here, those terminals led out in a direction
perpendicular to the front surface of the insulating plate 16 will be referred to
as "standing terminals". A fourth embodiment will show that it is possible to provide
a half-bridge power semiconductor module including standing terminals.
[0108] An example where the extended-wiring terminal structures in the first embodiment
(Fig. 1) (14H, 14B, 17L, 14HG, 14HS, 14LG, 14LS) are modified into standing terminals
will be described as a representative example of the fourth embodiment. Fig. 11A and
Fig. 11B illustrate the configuration of a half-bridge power semiconductor module
4 according to the fourth embodiment. Part (a) of Fig. 11A illustrates a plan view,
part (b) of Fig. 11A is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A'
in part (a) of Fig. 11A, part (c) of Fig. 11A is a cross-sectional view taken along
cross-sectional plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 11A, part (a) of Fig. 11B is a cross-sectional
view taken along cross-sectional plane C-C' in part (a) of Fig. 11A, and part (b)
of Fig. 11B is a circuit diagram. Note that a plurality of bonding wires (18HT, 18LT)
which are not actually present in the A-A' cross section are depicted in part (b)
of Fig. 11A for reference to the positions of the plurality of bonding wires (18HT,
18LT).
[0109] A bridge terminal 14B' is a plate-shaped standing terminal standing from the front
surface of an insulating wiring board 15. The bridge terminal 14B' is electrically
and physically joined to a bridge wiring conductor 12B by solder or the like. The
portions of the bridge terminal 14B' and the bridge wiring conductor 12B connected
to each other are situated between a high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and
a low-side power semiconductor device. A section of the bridge terminal 14B' below
a height level 30 is slit into a plurality (e.g. three) of branches. The bridge terminal
14B' has a rake-shaped (fork-shaped) structure. The bridge terminal 14B' includes
a flat plate-shaped base portion standing in a direction normal to the main surface
of a insulating plate 16, and a plurality of tooth portions branching in parallel
to each other from the base portion. The tips of the plurality of tooth portions are
connected to the bridge wiring conductor 12B.
[0110] A high-side terminal 14H' is a plate-shaped standing terminal standing from the front
surface of the insulating wiring board 15. The high-side terminal 14H' is electrically
and physically joined to a positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H by a silver alloy,
solder, or the like. The portions the high-side terminal 14H' and the positive-electrode
wiring conductor 12H connected to each other are situated between the high-side power
semiconductor device 13HT and the bridge terminal 14B'. A low-side terminal 17L' is
a plate-shaped standing terminal standing from the front surface of the insulating
wiring board 15. The low-side terminal 17L' is electrically and physically joined
to a negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L by a silver alloy, solder, or the like.
The portions the low-side terminal 17L' and the negative-electrode wiring conductor
21L connected to each other is situated between the bridge terminal 14B' and a low-side
power semiconductor device 13LT. Each of the high-side terminal 14H' and the low-side
terminal 17L' includes a flat plate-shaped base portion standing in the direction
normal to the main surface of the insulating plate 16, and a plurality of tooth portions
branching in parallel to each other from the base portion. The tips of the plurality
of tooth portions are connected to the bridge wiring conductor 12B. The high-side
terminal 14H', the bridge terminal 14B', and the low-side terminal 17L' are parallel
to each other.
[0111] A plurality of bonding wires 18BT perpendicularly cross the bridge terminal 14B'
by penetrating through the gaps between the tooth portions of the bridge terminal
14B'. A plurality of bonding wires 18LT are connected to the negative-electrode wiring
conductor 21L between the tooth portions of the low-side terminal 17L'.
[0112] A gate-signal terminal 14HG' and a source-signal terminal 14HS' are flat plate-shaped
standing terminals standing from the front surface of the insulating wiring board
15 in the direction normal to the main surface of the insulating plate 16, and are
electrically and physically joined to a high-side gate-signal wiring conductor 12HG
and source-signal wiring conductor 12HS. A gate-signal terminal 14LG' and a source-signal
terminal 14LS' are flat plate-shaped standing terminals standing from the front surface
of the insulating wiring board 15 in the direction normal to the main surface of the
insulating plate 16, and are electrically and physically joined to a low-side gate-signal
wiring conductor 12LG and source-signal wiring conductor 12LS. The gate-signal terminal
(14HG', 14LG') and the source-signal terminal (14LG', 14LS') are parallel to each
other. Moreover, the gate-signal terminal (14HG', 14LG') and the source-signal terminal
(14LG', 14LS') are desirably as close as possible in view of reducing the gate inductance.
Note that the extending terminals illustrated in Fig. 1 (14HG, 14HS, 14LG, 14LS) may
be used in place of the standing terminals illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 11B (14HG',
14HS', 14LG', 14LS'). The other features of the configuration are the same as Fig.
1, and description thereof will be omitted.
[0113] An example of the method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module
4, illustrated in Fig. 11, will be described with reference to Fig. 12.
[0114] In the first step, as illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 12, an insulating wiring board
including the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H, the bridge wiring conductor
12B, the gate-signal wiring conductors (12HG, 12LG), and the source-signal wiring
conductors (12HS, 12LS) is prepared. In addition, though not illustrated, an insulating
chip 20 with the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L joined thereto, the high-side
power semiconductor device 13HT, and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT
are prepared. The insulating wiring board is thoroughly washed with an organic solvent
such as acetone or ethanol.
[0115] Thereafter, in the second step, as illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 12, the back-surface
electrodes of the power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT) are soldered to predetermined
positions on the wiring conductors (12H, 12B) of the insulating wiring board 15 by
using a vacuum reflow apparatus. The negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L is joined
to the front side of the bridge wiring conductor 12B at a position between the high-side
power semiconductor device 13HT and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT with
the insulating chip 20 interposed between the negative-electrode wiring conductor
21L and the bridge wiring conductor 12B. In doing so, a carbon positioning jig is
desirably used for accurate positioning of the power semiconductor devices (13HT,
13LT) and the insulating chip 20. Note that the joining method is not limited to soldering.
It is also possible to use joining using an electrically conductive adhesive, joining
using submicron particles of a conductor such as Ag or Cu, solid-phase (or liquid-phase)
diffusion bonding, or the like.
[0116] In the next third step, as illustrated in part (c) of Fig. 12, the front-surface
electrodes (source electrodes, gate electrodes) of the power semiconductor devices
(13HT, 13LT) and the wiring conductors (12B, 12HG, 12HS, 21L, 12LG, 12LS) are connected
with bonding wires (18BT, 18HG, 18HS, 18LT, 18LG, 18LS) by using a wire bonding apparatus.
[0117] Lastly in the fourth step, the standing terminals (14H', 14B', 17L', 14HG', 14HS',
14LG', 14LS') are soldered to predetermined positions on the front surfaces of the
wiring conductors (12H, 12B, 21L, 12HG, 12HS, 12LG, 12LS) by using solder paste and
a vacuum reflow apparatus. A carbon positioning jig is desirably used for accurate
positioning. The solder used in the fourth step is desirably a material lower in melting
point than the solder used in the second step by 30°C or higher. Consequently, the
half-bridge power semiconductor module 4, illustrated in Fig. 11A and Fig. 11B, is
completed.
[0118] As is clear from part (b) and part (c) of Fig. 11A, the insulating wiring board 15
includes a single-layer insulating plate 16. Thus, the thermal resistance is lower
than the comparative example in Fig. 21, and a thermal resistance as low as that of
a conventional power semiconductor module is achieved.
[0119] Part (b) of Fig. 11A and part (a) to part (c) of Fig. 13 illustrate all electric
conduction modes of principal currents (load currents) ILH and ILL which flow in the
half-bridge power semiconductor module 4. It can be seen that the principal currents
(load currents) ILH and ILL generate close and parallel counterflows in all electric
conduction modes.
[0120] Further, the flows of the principal currents around the input-output terminals (14H',
14B', 17L') will be considered in detail. In the terminal configuration of the fourth
embodiment, the principal currents flow through wider regions and closer to each other
in parallel and opposite directions than the first to third embodiments and their
modifications. This is electromagnetically equivalent to reducing the parasitic inductances
around the input-output terminals. Hence, according to the fourth embodiment, the
parasitic inductances around the input-output terminals can be smaller than the first
to third embodiments and their modifications.
[0121] As is confirmed from part (a) of Fig. 11A and part (a) of Fig. 11B, the structure
of the standing gate-signal terminal 14HG' (14LG') and the standing source-signal
terminal 14HS' (14LS') is such that their flat plates are closer to each other than
the extending gate-signal terminal 14HG (14LG) and the extending source-signal terminal
14HS (14LS) in the first embodiment (Fig. 1). That is, the gate-signal terminals and
the source-signal terminals in this embodiment have the advantage that they can achieve
a lower gate parasitic inductance than the first to third embodiments and are accordingly
advantageous for high-speed switching operation.
[Fifth Embodiment]
[0122] In the first to fourth embodiments and their modifications, the high-side power semiconductor
device 13HT (13HD) and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT (13LD) are bridge-connected.
Moreover, an environment is established in which a low-side principal current (ILL)
that flows through the plurality of bonding wires 18LT (18LD), which are an example
of the low-side connection means for connecting the negative-electrode wiring conductor
21L and the power semiconductor device 13LT (13LD), and a low-side principal current
(ILL) that flows through the bridge wiring conductor 12 are caused to flow close to
each other in opposite directions. Thus, the insulating chip 20 with the negative-electrode
wiring conductor 21L and the low-side terminal 17L attached thereto plays an important
role. However, as will be described in a fifth embodiment, it is also possible to
provide a half-bridge power semiconductor module using a structure without the insulating
chip 20.
[0123] While the fifth embodiment is applicable to all other embodiments and their modifications,
description will be given below for convenience by using an example where the fifth
embodiment is applied to the fourth embodiment (Fig. 11A and Fig. 11B). The same constituent
elements as those in Fig. 11A and Fig. 11B will be denoted by the same reference signs,
and description thereof will be omitted.
[0124] The configuration of a half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 according to the
fifth embodiment will be described with reference to Fig. 14A and Fig. 14B. Part (a)
of Fig. 14A illustrates a plan view of the half-bridge power semiconductor module
5, part (b) of Fig. 14A is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane
A-A' in part (a) of Fig. 14A, and part (c) of Fig. 14A is a cross-sectional view taken
along cross-sectional plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 14A. Part (d) of Fig. 14A is
an imaginary plan view obtained by removing standing terminals (14B', 14H', 14L',
14HG', 14HS', 14LG', 14LS') from part (a) of Fig. 14A. Fig. 14B is an equivalent circuit
diagram. Fig. 14A illustrates a principal current ILL which flows while a low-side
semiconductor device (switch) 13LT is turned on.
[0125] As illustrated in part (a) and part (d) of Fig. 14A, negative-electrode wiring conductors
12L are each surrounded by a bridge wiring conductor 12B with a clearance therebetween
as viewed from a direction normal to the main surface of an insulating plate 16. The
insulating chip 20 illustrated in Fig. 11, the negative-electrode wiring conductor
21L formed on the insulating chip 20, and the low-side terminal 17L' joined to the
front side of the negative-electrode wiring conductor 21L are not present. An insulating
wiring board 15 includes the insulating plate 16, wiring conductors (12B, 12H, 12L,
12HG, 12HS, 12LG, 12LS) arranged on the front surface of the insulating plate 16,
and a thermal-strain alleviation conductor 22 arranged on the back surface of the
insulating plate 16. The negative-electrode wiring conductors 12L are each provided
at a region within the bridge wiring conductor 12B with a clearance therebetween.
As illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 14A, a standing low-side terminal 14L' and the
ends of a plurality of bonding wires 18LT on one side are connected to the negative-electrode
wiring conductors 12L. The negative-electrode wiring conductors 12L are situated between
the low-side terminal 14L' and the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT. The structure
of the standing low-side terminal 14L' is similar to the low-side terminal 17L' in
Fig. 11.
[0126] The positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H and the bridge wiring conductor 12B include
protrusions 12HH and 12BB protruding into the other's region. The ends of a plurality
of bonding wires 18BT (high-side connection means) on one side are connected to the
protrusions 12BB, and a standing bridge terminal 14B' is connected to the protrusions
12HH by solder or the like. As illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 14A, the positional
relation between a high-side power semiconductor device 13HT, a high-side terminal
14H', the bridge terminal 14B', the low-side terminal 14L', and the low-side power
semiconductor device 13LT as viewed from the direction normal to the main surface
of the insulating plate 16 is the same as the fourth embodiment (Fig. 11A).
[0127] Next, an example of the method of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 5, illustrated in Fig. 14A and Fig. 14B, will be described with reference to
Fig. 15. The manufacturing steps to be discussed here correspond to the manufacturing
steps in the fourth embodiment, which have been described with reference to Fig. 12.
[0128] In the first step, as illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 15, the insulating wiring board
15 including the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H, the bridge wiring conductor
12B, the negative-electrode wiring conductors 12L, the gate-signal wiring conductors
(12HG, 12LG), and the source-signal wiring conductors (12HS, 12LS) is prepared. In
addition, though not illustrated, the high-side power semiconductor device 13HT and
the low-side power semiconductor device 13LT are prepared. The insulating wiring board
15 is thoroughly washed with an organic solvent such as acetone or ethanol.
[0129] Thereafter, in the second step, as illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 15, the back-surface
electrodes of the power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT) are soldered to predetermined
positions on the wiring conductors (12H, 12B) of the insulating wiring board 15 by
using a vacuum reflow apparatus. In doing so, a carbon positioning jig is desirably
used for accurate positioning of the power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT). Note
that the joining method is not limited to soldering. It is also possible to use joining
using an electrically conductive adhesive, joining using submicron particles of a
conductor such as Ag or Cu, solid-phase (or liquid-phase) diffusion bonding, or the
like.
[0130] In the next third step, as illustrated in part (c) of Fig. 15, the front-surface
electrodes (source electrodes, gate electrodes) of the power semiconductor devices
(13HT, 13LT) and the wiring conductors (12B, 12L, 12HG, 12HS, 12LG, 12LS) are connected
with bonding wires (18BT, 18HG, 18HS, 18LT, 18LG, 18LS) by using a wire bonding apparatus.
The connection means is not limited to bonding wires, and different connection means
may be used.
[0131] Lastly in the fourth step, the standing terminals (14H', 14B', 14L', 14HG', 14HS',
14LG', 14LS') are soldered to predetermined positions on the front surfaces of the
wiring conductors (12H, 12B, 12L, 12HG, 12HS, 12LG, 12LS) by using solder paste and
a vacuum reflow apparatus. A carbon positioning jig is desirably used for accurate
positioning. The solder used in the fourth step is desirably a material lower in melting
point than the solder used in the second step by 30°C or higher. Consequently, the
half-bridge power semiconductor module 5, illustrated in Fig. 14A and Fig. 14B, is
completed.
[0132] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 5, illustrated in Fig. 14A and Fig. 14B,
can be manufactured alternatively by another manufacturing method illustrated in part
(a) to part (c) of Fig. 16.
[0133] In the first step, as illustrated in part (a) of Fig. 16, the insulating wiring board
15 including the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H, the bridge wiring conductor
12B, the negative-electrode wiring conductors 12L, the gate-signal wiring conductors
(12HG, 12LG), and the source-signal wiring conductors (12HS, 12LS) is prepared. In
addition, though not illustrated, the standing terminals (14H', 14B', 14L', 14HG',
14HS', 14LG', 14LS') are prepared. The insulating wiring board 15 is thoroughly washed
with an organic solvent such as acetone or ethanol.
[0134] Thereafter, in the second step, as illustrated in part (b) of Fig. 16, the standing
terminals (14H', 14B', 14L', 14HG', 14HS', 14LS', 14LS') are silver-brazed to predetermined
positions on the front-surface wiring conductors 12H, 12B, 12L, 14HG, 14HS, 14LG,
and 14LS of the insulating wiring board 15 by using a high-temperature joining apparatus.
In doing so, a carbon positioning jig is desirably used for accurate positioning of
the standing terminals. Note that the joining method is not limited to silver brazing.
It is also possible to use soldering, joining using an electrically conductive adhesive,
joining using submicron particles of a conductor such as Ag or Cu, solid-phase (or
liquid-phase) diffusion bonding, or the like.
[0135] Thereafter, in the next third step, as illustrated in part (c) of Fig. 16, the power
semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT), thoroughly washed, are soldered to predetermined
positions on the positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H and the bridge wiring conductor
12B by using a vacuum reflow apparatus. In doing so, a carbon positioning jig is desirably
used for accurate positioning of the power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT). The
joining method is not limited to soldering. It is also possible to use joining using
an electrically conductive adhesive, joining using submicron particles of a conductor
such as Ag or Cu, solid-phase (or liquid-phase) diffusion bonding, or the like. The
material is desirably such that its process temperature for the joining is lower than
the limit temperature of the joining material used in the second step by 30°C or higher.
[0136] Lastly in the fourth step, the front-surface electrodes (source electrodes, gate
electrodes) of the power semiconductor devices (13HT, 13LT) and the wiring conductors
(12B, 12L, 12HG, 12HS, 12LG, 12LS) are connected with the bonding wires (18BT, 18HG,
18HS, 18LT, 18LG, 18LS) by using a wire bonding apparatus. The connection means is
not limited to bonding wires, and different connection means may be used. Consequently,
the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5, illustrated in Fig. 14A and Fig. 14B,
is completed.
[0137] As is clear from part (b) and part (c) of Fig. 14A, the insulating wiring board 15
includes a single-layer insulating plate 16. Thus, the thermal resistance is lower
than the comparative example in Fig. 21, and a thermal resistance as low as that of
a conventional power semiconductor module is achieved.
[0138] Part (a) of Fig. 14A, part (c) of Fig. 14A, Fig. 17A, and Fig. 17B illustrate all
electric conduction modes of principal currents (load currents) ILH and ILL which
flow in the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5. It can be seen that the principal
currents (load currents) ILH and ILL generate close and parallel counterflows in all
electric conduction modes.
[0139] The flow of a principal current ILL on the low side will now be reviewed in detail
with the right-left direction and the up-down direction of plan views (part (a) of
Fig. 14A, part (c) of Fig. 17A) defined as an x axis and a y axis, respectively, and
the direction perpendicular to the surface of the sheet defined as a z axis. At a
section covering the plurality of bonding wires 18LT and a section covering the standing
terminals (14B', 14L'), the principal current ILL generates close and parallel counterflows
in the xz plane (part (c) of Fig. 14A, part (d) of Fig. 17A), as in the fourth embodiment
(Fig. 11A). Moreover, at a section covering the negative-electrode wiring conductors
12L, the principal current ILL generates close and parallel counterflows in the xy
plane, unlike the fourth embodiment (Fig. 11A).
[0140] On the other hand, the flow of a principal current ILH on the high side is the same
as the fourth embodiment (Fig. 11A) and generates close and parallel counterflows
in the same manner as the fourth embodiment (Fig. 11).
[0141] Also, the flows of the principal currents (ILL, ILH) around the input-output terminals
(14H', 14B', 17L') are the same as the fourth embodiment. Thus, as in the fourth embodiment,
according to the fifth embodiment, the parasitic inductances around the input-output
terminals can be smaller than the first to third embodiments and their modifications.
[Sixth Embodiment]
[0142] As mentioned in the second embodiment, one of the high-side power semiconductor device
and the low-side power semiconductor device may be a power switching element, and
the other may be a power diode. In a sixth embodiment, a half-bridge power semiconductor
module 6 will be described which is obtained by replacing the low-side power semiconductor
device (switch) 13LT in the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 in the fifth
embodiment with a high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD.
[0143] Part (a) of Fig. 18 is a plan view illustrating the structure of the half-bridge
power semiconductor module 6 according to the sixth embodiment, part (b) of Fig. 18
is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane A-A' in part (a) of Fig.
18, and part (c) of Fig. 18 is a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane B-B' in part (a) of Fig. 18. The half-bridge power semiconductor module 6 includes
the high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD arranged on the front surface of a bridge
wiring conductor 12B as the low-side power semiconductor device. The back-surface
electrode (cathode) of the high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD is die-bonded
to a predetermined position on the bridge wiring conductor 12B with solder or the
like. The back-surface electrode (anode) of the high-speed freewheeling power diode
13LD is connected to negative-electrode wiring conductors 12L by a plurality of bonding
wires 18LD.
[0144] The half-bridge power semiconductor module 6 includes an insulating wiring board
15. The high-speed freewheeling power diode 13LD includes no gate electrode, and therefore
the insulating wiring board 15 has the same configuration as the insulating wiring
board 15 in part (a) of Fig. 1 except that there is no low-side gate-signal wiring
conductor (12LG) or source-signal wiring conductor (12LS). In addition, there is no
low-side bonding wire (18LG, 18LS) or standing terminal (14LG', 14LS') either.
[0145] The steps of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 6, illustrated
in Fig. 18, are the same as the steps of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 5 described using Fig. 15 or Fig. 16, and description thereof will therefore
be omitted.
[0146] The operation modes of the half-bridge power semiconductor module 6 are the same
as the operation modes of the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 illustrated
in Fig. 17A and Fig. 17B. It is, however, assumed that the low-side power semiconductor
device (switch) 13LT in Fig. 16 is replaced with the high-speed freewheeling power
diode 13LD.
[0147] Since the basic configurations and the operation modes of various members are the
same as the fifth embodiment (Fig. 14A), the sixth embodiment can also achieve the
same operations and advantageous effects as the fifth embodiment.
[Seventh Embodiment]
[0148] As mentioned in the third embodiment, at least one of the high-side power semiconductor
device and the low-side power semiconductor device may include a power switching element
and a power diode connected in anti-parallel to the power switching element. In a
seventh embodiment, a half-bridge power semiconductor module 7 will be described which
is obtained by connecting a high-speed freewheeling power diode FWD in anti-parallel
to the half-bridge power semiconductor module 5 in the fifth embodiment.
[0149] In the seventh embodiment, high-speed freewheeling power diodes FWD (13HD, 13LD)
are connected in anti-parallel to a high-side power semiconductor device (switch)
13HT and a low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT, respectively.
[0150] Fig. 19 is a plan view illustrating the structure of the half-bridge power semiconductor
module 7 according to the seventh embodiment. A cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional
plane A-A' in Fig. 19 and a cross-sectional view taken along cross-sectional plane
B-B' in Fig. 19 are the same as part (c) of Fig. 18 and part (b) of Fig. 18, and a
circuit diagram thereof is the same as part (c) of Fig. 6. The same constituent elements
as those in Fig. 6 and Fig. 18 will be denoted by the same reference signs, and description
thereof will be omitted.
[0151] Negative-electrode wiring conductors 12LT are each surrounded by a bridge wiring
conductor 12B(T) with a clearance therebetween as viewed from a direction normal to
the main surface of an insulating plate 16. Negative-electrode wiring conductors 12LD
are each surrounded by a bridge wiring conductor 12B(D) with a clearance therebetween
as viewed from the direction normal to the main surface of the insulating plate 16.
A low-side terminal 14L' which is a standing terminal is joined to the negative-electrode
wiring conductors (12LT, 12LD). A plurality of bonding wires 18LT connect the negative-electrode
wiring conductors 12LT and a front-surface electrode (source electrode or emitter
electrode) of the low-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13LT. A plurality of
bonding wires 18LD connect the negative-electrode wiring conductors 12LD and a front-surface
electrode (anode) of the low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD.
[0152] A standing bridge terminal 14B' is joined to the bridge wiring conductors 12B(T)
and 12B(D) in such a way as to extend across the bridge wiring conductors 12B(T) and
12B(D). A standing high-side terminal 14H' is joined to the protruding regions of
a positive-electrode wiring conductor 12H(T) and a positive-electrode wiring conductor
12H(D).
[0153] A plurality of bonding wires 18HT connect the protruding regions of the bridge wiring
conductor 12B(D) and a front-surface electrode (source electrode or emitter electrode)
of the high-side power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT. A plurality of bonding
wires 18HD connect the protruding regions of the bridge wiring conductor 12B(T) and
a front-surface electrode (anode) of the high-side power semiconductor device (diode)
13HD.
[0154] The steps of manufacturing the half-bridge power semiconductor module 7 according
to the seventh embodiment are substantially the same as the manufacturing steps described
using Fig. 15 or Fig. 16, and description thereof will therefore be omitted.
[0155] As in the sixth embodiment, the half-bridge power semiconductor module 7 according
to the seventh embodiment includes an insulating wiring board 31 (Fig. 18) including
a single-layer insulating plate 16. Hence, the thermal resistance is lower than the
comparative example in Fig. 21, in which the insulating plate includes two layers,
and a thermal resistance as low as a conventional power semiconductor module is achieved.
[0156] Part (a) of Fig. 20A illustrates a principal current ILH which flows while the high-side
power semiconductor device (switch) 13HT in Fig. 19 is turned on, and part (b) of
Fig. 20A illustrates a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows through the
low-side power semiconductor device (diode) 13LD in Fig. 19. Part (a) of Fig. 20B
illustrates a principal current ILL which flows while the low-side power semiconductor
device (switch) 13LT in Fig. 19 is turned on, and part (b) of Fig. 20B illustrates
a principal current (loop current) ILL which flows through the high-side power semiconductor
device (diode) 13HD in Fig. 19. It can be seen that the principal currents ILH and
ILL generate close and parallel counterflows in all operation modes of the half-bridge
power semiconductor module 7, as illustrated in Fig. 20A and Fig. 20B.
[0157] Since the basic configurations and the operation modes of various members are the
same as the third embodiment (Fig. 6) and the sixth embodiment (Fig. 18), the seventh
embodiment can also achieve the same operations and advantageous effects as the third
embodiment and the sixth embodiment.
[0158] The content of the present invention has been described above with embodiments. However,
it is apparent to those skilled in the art that the present invention is not limited
to the description of these embodiments but can be changed and modified in various
ways.
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
[0159]
- 1 to 7, 1', 3-1, 3-2, 3-3
- half-bridge power semiconductor module
- 12H, 12H(T), 12H(D)
- positive-electrode wiring conductor
- 12L, 12LT, 12LD, 21L
- negative-electrode wiring conductor
- 12B, 12B(T), 12B(D)
- bridge wiring conductor
- 12HG, 12LG
- gate(base)-signal wiring conductor
- 12HS, 12LS
- source(emitter)-signal wiring conductor
- 13HT
- high-side power semiconductor device (switch)
- 13HD
- high-side power semiconductor device (diode FWD)
- 13LT
- low-side power semiconductor device(switch)
- 13LD
- low-side power semiconductor device(diode FWD)
- 14H, 14H1, 14H2, 14H'
- high-side terminal
- 14L', 17L, 17L1, 17L2, 17L'
- low-side terminal
- 14B, 14B1, 14B2, 14B'
- bridge terminal
- 14HG, 14LG, 14HG', 14LG'
- gate-signal terminal
- 14HS, 14LS, 14HS', 14LS'
- source-signal terminal
- 15, 31
- insulating wiring board
- 16
- insulating plate
- 18BT, 18BD
- plurality of bonding wires (high-side connection means)
- 18LT, 18LD
- plurality of bonding wires (low-side connection means)
- 18HG, 18LG
- plurality of bonding wires (gate-signal connection means)
- 18HS, 18LS
- plurality of bonding wires (source-signal connection means)
- 20
- insulating chip
- 25HB, 25LB
- snubber capacitor
- ILH, ILL
- principal current
1. A half-bridge power semiconductor module comprising:
an insulating wiring board including
a single insulating plate, and
a positive-electrode wiring conductor, a bridge wiring conductor, and a negative-electrode
wiring conductor arranged on or above the insulating plate in such a way as to be
electrically insulated from each other;
at least one high-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor;
at least one low-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the bridge wiring conductor;
a bridge terminal connected to the bridge wiring conductor between the high-side power
semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device;
a high-side terminal connected to the positive-electrode wiring conductor between
the high-side power semiconductor device and the bridge terminal;
a low-side terminal connected to the negative-electrode wiring conductor between the
bridge terminal and the low-side power semiconductor device;
high-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the high-side
power semiconductor device and the bridge wiring conductor; and
low-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the low-side
power semiconductor device and the negative-electrode wiring conductor.
2. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 1, wherein a principal
current flowing through the positive-electrode wiring conductor and a principal current
flowing through the high-side connection means are equal to each other in magnitude
and are opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
3. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 1 or 2, wherein a principal
current flowing through the bridge wiring conductor and a principal current flowing
through the low-side connection means are equal to each other in magnitude and are
opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
4. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 3,
wherein the bridge terminal, the high-side terminal, and the low-side terminal are
arranged close and parallel to each other.
5. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 4,
wherein a principal current flowing through the high-side terminal and a principal
current flowing through the bridge terminal are equal to each other in magnitude and
are opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
6. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 5,
wherein a principal current flowing through the low-side terminal and a principal
current flowing through the bridge terminal are equal to each other in magnitude and
are opposite and parallel to each other in direction.
7. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 6,
wherein a direction of a principal current flowing through the positive-electrode
wiring conductor and a direction of a principal current flowing through the high-side
terminal are perpendicular to each other.
8. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 7,
wherein a direction of a principal current flowing through the bridge wiring conductor
and a direction of a principal current flowing through the low-side terminal are substantially
perpendicular to each other.
9. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 8,
wherein
the insulating wiring board further includes a gate-signal wiring conductor and a
source-signal wiring conductor arranged on the insulating plate,
the half-bridge power semiconductor module further comprises
a gate-signal terminal connected to the gate-signal wiring conductor,
a source-signal terminal connected to the source-signal wiring conductor,
gate-signal connection means for connecting a gate electrode of at least one of the
high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device and
the gate-signal wiring conductor, and
source-signal connection means for connecting a source electrode of the at least one
of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device
and the source-signal wiring conductor, and
the gate-signal connection means and the source-signal connection means are arranged
in parallel to each other and the gate-signal terminal and the source-signal terminal
are arranged in parallel to each other such that equal amounts of gate-signal currents
flow therethrough in opposite and parallel directions.
10. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 9,
wherein the negative-electrode wiring conductor is arranged above the bridge wiring
conductor with an insulating chip interposed therebetween.
11. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 10,
wherein the high-side terminal, the bridge terminal, and the low-side terminal are
part of the positive-electrode wiring conductor, part of the bridge wiring conductor,
and part of the negative-electrode wiring conductor extended in a direction parallel
to a main surface of the insulating plate, respectively.
12. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 9, wherein the gate-signal
terminal and the source-signal terminal are part of the gate-signal wiring conductor
and part of the source-signal wiring conductor extended in a direction parallel to
a main surface of the insulating plate, respectively.
13. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 10 to 12,
further comprising at least one of:
a high-side snubber capacitor connected between the high-side terminal and the bridge
terminal at a main surface of the insulating plate; and
a low-side snubber capacitor connected between the bridge terminal and the low-side
terminal at the main surface of the insulating plate.
14. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 13,
wherein one of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor
device is a power switching element, and the other is a power diode.
15. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 13,
wherein at least one of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side
power semiconductor device includes a power switching element and a power diode connected
in anti-parallel to the power switching element.
16. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 15, wherein in at least
one of the positive-electrode wiring conductor and the bridge wiring conductor, a
slit is formed as a partition between the power switching element and the power diode.
17. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 15, wherein two or more
of the high-side power semiconductor devices are aligned in one direction in such
a way as to share a flow path for principal currents flowing through each of the positive-electrode
wiring conductor and the high-side connection means.
18. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 15 or 17, wherein two
or more of the low-side power semiconductor devices are aligned in one direction in
such a way as to share a flow path for principal currents flowing through each of
the bridge wiring conductor and the low-side connection means.
19. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 9,
wherein the negative-electrode wiring conductor is surrounded by the bridge wiring
conductor with a clearance therebetween as viewed from a direction normal to a main
surface of the insulating plate.
20. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 10
and 19, wherein the high-side terminal, the bridge terminal, and the low-side terminal
are flat plate-shaped terminals standing from portions thereof connected to the positive-electrode
wiring conductor, the bridge wiring conductor, and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
respectively, in a direction normal to a main surface of the insulating plate.
21. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 20, wherein the high-side
terminal, the bridge terminal, and the low-side terminal are parallel to each other.
22. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 20 or 21, wherein
the high-side terminal and the low-side terminal each include a flat plate-shaped
base portion standing in the direction normal to the main surface of the insulating
plate, and a plurality of tooth portions branching from the base portion, and
tips of the plurality of tooth portions are connected to the corresponding one of
the positive-electrode wiring conductor and the negative-electrode wiring conductor.
23. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 1 to 9 and
19 to 22, wherein the gate-signal terminal and the source-signal terminal are flat
plate-shaped terminals standing from the gate-signal wiring conductor and the source-signal
wiring conductor, respectively, in a direction normal to a main surface of the insulating
plate.
24. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to claim 23, wherein the gate-signal
terminal and the source-signal terminal are parallel to each other.
25. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 19 to 24,
wherein one of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor
device is a power switching element, and the other is a power diode.
26. The half-bridge power semiconductor module according to any one of claims 19 to 24,
wherein at least one of the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side
power semiconductor device includes a power switching element and a power diode connected
in anti-parallel to the power switching element.
27. A method of manufacturing a half-bridge power semiconductor module including
an insulating wiring board including
a single insulating plate, and
a positive-electrode wiring conductor, a bridge wiring conductor, and a negative-electrode
wiring conductor arranged on or above the insulating plate in such a way as to be
electrically insulated from each other,
at least one high-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor,
at least one low-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the bridge wiring conductor,
a bridge terminal connected to the bridge wiring conductor between the high-side power
semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device,
a high-side terminal connected to the positive-electrode wiring conductor between
the high-side power semiconductor device and the bridge terminal,
a low-side terminal connected to the negative-electrode wiring conductor between the
bridge terminal and the low-side power semiconductor device,
high-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the high-side
power semiconductor device and the bridge wiring conductor, and
low-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the low-side
power semiconductor device and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
the negative-electrode wiring conductor being arranged above the bridge wiring conductor
with an insulating chip interposed therebetween,
the high-side terminal, the bridge terminal, and the low-side terminal being part
of the positive-electrode wiring conductor, part of the bridge wiring conductor, and
part of the negative-electrode wiring conductor extended in a direction parallel to
a main surface of the insulating plate, respectively,
the method comprising:
preparing an insulating wiring board including the positive-electrode wiring conductor
and the bridge wiring conductor, the insulating chip with the negative-electrode wiring
conductor joined thereto, the high-side power semiconductor device, and the low-side
power semiconductor device;
joining the back-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device to
the front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor;
joining the back-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device to the
front side of the bridge wiring conductor;
joining the negative-electrode wiring conductor to the front side of the bridge wiring
conductor between the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power
semiconductor device with the insulating chip interposed between the negative-electrode
wiring conductor and the bridge wiring conductor;
connecting the front-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device
and the bridge wiring conductor by using the high-side connection means; and
connecting the front-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device
and the negative-electrode wiring conductor by using the low-side connection means.
28. A method of manufacturing a half-bridge power semiconductor module including
an insulating wiring board including
a single insulating plate, and
a positive-electrode wiring conductor, a bridge wiring conductor, and a negative-electrode
wiring conductor arranged on or above the insulating plate in such a way as to be
electrically insulated from each other,
at least one high-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor,
at least one low-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the bridge wiring conductor,
a bridge terminal connected to the bridge wiring conductor between the high-side power
semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device,
a high-side terminal connected to the positive-electrode wiring conductor between
the high-side power semiconductor device and the bridge terminal,
a low-side terminal connected to the negative-electrode wiring conductor between the
bridge terminal and the low-side power semiconductor device,
high-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the high-side
power semiconductor device and the bridge wiring conductor, and
low-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the low-side
power semiconductor device and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
the negative-electrode wiring conductor being arranged above the bridge wiring conductor
with an insulating chip interposed therebetween,
the high-side terminal, the bridge terminal, and the low-side terminal being flat
plate-shaped terminals standing from portions thereof connected to the positive-electrode
wiring conductor, the bridge wiring conductor, and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
respectively, in a direction normal to a main surface of the insulating plate,
the method comprising:
preparing an insulating wiring board including the positive-electrode wiring conductor
and the bridge wiring conductor, the insulating chip with the negative-electrode wiring
conductor joined thereto, the high-side power semiconductor device, and the low-side
power semiconductor device;
joining the back-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device to
the front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor;
joining the back-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device to the
front side of the bridge wiring conductor;
joining the negative-electrode wiring conductor to the front side of the bridge wiring
conductor between the high-side power semiconductor device and the low-side power
semiconductor device with the insulating chip interposed between the negative-electrode
wiring conductor and the bridge wiring conductor;
connecting the front-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device
and the bridge wiring conductor by using the high-side connection means;
connecting the front-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device
and the negative-electrode wiring conductor by using the low-side connection means;
connecting the bridge terminal to the bridge wiring conductor;
connecting the high-side terminal to the positive-electrode wiring conductor; and
connecting the low-side terminal to the negative-electrode wiring conductor.
29. A method of manufacturing a half-bridge power semiconductor module including
an insulating wiring board including
a single insulating plate, and
a positive-electrode wiring conductor, a bridge wiring conductor, and a negative-electrode
wiring conductor arranged on the insulating plate in such a way as to be electrically
insulated from each other,
at least one high-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor,
at least one low-side power semiconductor device with a back-surface electrode thereof
joined to a front side of the bridge wiring conductor,
a bridge terminal connected to the bridge wiring conductor between the high-side power
semiconductor device and the low-side power semiconductor device,
a high-side terminal connected to the positive-electrode wiring conductor between
the high-side power semiconductor device and the bridge terminal,
a low-side terminal connected to the negative-electrode wiring conductor between the
bridge terminal and the low-side power semiconductor device,
high-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the high-side
power semiconductor device and the bridge wiring conductor, and
low-side connection means for connecting a front-surface electrode of the low-side
power semiconductor device and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
the negative-electrode wiring conductor being surrounded by the bridge wiring conductor
with a clearance therebetween as viewed from a direction normal to a main surface
of the insulating plate,
the high-side terminal, the bridge terminal, and the low-side terminal being flat
plate-shaped terminals standing from portions thereof connected to the positive-electrode
wiring conductor, the bridge wiring conductor, and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
respectively, in the direction normal to the main surface of the insulating plate,
the method comprising:
preparing the insulating wiring board, which includes the positive-electrode wiring
conductor, the bridge wiring conductor, and the negative-electrode wiring conductor,
the high-side power semiconductor device, and the low-side power semiconductor device;
joining the back-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device to
the front side of the positive-electrode wiring conductor;
joining the back-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device to the
front side of the bridge wiring conductor;
connecting the front-surface electrode of the high-side power semiconductor device
and the bridge wiring conductor by using the high-side connection means;
connecting the front-surface electrode of the low-side power semiconductor device
and the negative-electrode wiring conductor by using the low-side connection means;
connecting the bridge terminal to the bridge wiring conductor;
connecting the high-side terminal to the positive-electrode wiring conductor; and
connecting the low-side terminal to the negative-electrode wiring conductor.